25. Married Man’s A Fool (1974) Ry probably learned “Married Man’s A Fool” from the Blind Willie McTell album Last Session recorded in 1956 and released on Bluesway in 1961. But this comedy blues number dates back to 1924 when it appeared on the B-side of “I Can’t Use You”, an Okeh single by the husband and wife duo Butterbeans and Susie.
The Paradise and Lunch sleeve notes give writing credit to Blind Willie McTell, but the Okeh 78rpm recording credits Eddie Green & Janie Edwards. Ry’s performance is faithful to the McTell version but, perhaps wisely, he deleted the line “if your wife get crooked, give her a mouthful of fist”.
A 1960 re-recording of the song by Butterbeans and Susie version with a different composer credit was issued as a US single B-side in 1966 on the S.D label.
24. Smack Dab In The Middle (1976)
“I want ten Cadillacs, a diamond mill
Ten suits of clothes, I’m dressed to kill
A ten room house and a barbeque
And fifty chicks not over twenty-two
Then throw me smack dab in the middle”
Ray Charles recorded probably the best-known version of “Smack Dab in the Middle” in 1964, but the song started life a decade earlier when Charlie Calhoun and his Orchestra issued the first version on MGM in 1955. Charles (aka Charlie) Calhoun also wrote and recorded under the name Jesse Stone and he penned “Money Honey” discussed elsewhere (see #13).
Other early recordings of the song include the Jacks (1955), the Mills Brothers (1956) and Count Basie and his Orchestra with Joe Williams (1956).
Another Chicken Skin Music gem, Ry’s version of “Smack Dab in the Middle” ticks all the boxes with a great lyric, a fine vocal backing trio and all the slide guitar you could ever want.
23. Little Sister (1979)
Recorded on a 32-track 3M digital machine, Bop Til You Drop was the first digitally recorded major label album in popular music. Much was made of this fact in 1979 although, in truth, few people had any idea what it all meant in the pre-CD age. In fact, all those late 70s magazine articles packed with technical talk seemed distinctly at odds with Ry’s catalogue of rustic music from America’s distant past.
Another departure was the album’s undeniably commercial opening track “Little Sister”. Released as a single, it received much radio play and even became a chart hit in some countries. In the early 80s it was also the default opening song at Ry’s live shows. Cooder was reluctantly persuaded to include his only FM radio hit on the 2008 double CD anthology The UFO Has Landed, where it was accompanied with a typically sardonic Ry sleeve note: “James Austin (executive producer) said ‘Put this on here or I quit’”.
Written by Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, “Little Sister” was first recorded by Elvis in June 1961 with Hank Garland and Scotty Moore on guitars.
22. Great Dream From Heaven (1972)Bahamian guitarist Joseph Spence (1910 - 1984), was already in his late forties when folklorists Sam Charters and Ann Danberg Charters first recorded his unique guitar stylings for the Folkways label in 1958. His music went on to be covered by Taj Mahal, the Grateful Dead, Davey Graham, John Renbourn and others. It’s even been suggested that Bob Dylan used the tune of “Great Dream From Heaven” for his song “Only A Hobo.” Ry is a Joseph Spence devotee and has recorded several of his tunes, including three on the Jazz album alone. The instrumental “Great Dream From Heaven” from Into The Purple Valley is the earliest and probably the best-known of Ry's Spence covers.
21. Go Home Girl (1979)
One of the great unsung heroes of 60s pop / soul, Arthur Alexander’s songs have been recorded by the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and countless other big names. “Anna (Go To Him)”, “You Better Move On”, “A Shot Of Rhythm & Blues” and “Everyday I Have To Cry” are just four of the undisputed classics he wrote and recorded during the 60s.
Delivered very much in the style of “You Better Move On”, “Go Home Girl” was Alexander’s 1962 follow-up single to “Anna” and although not quite as well-known as some of his other hits the tune is as strong as anything in his impressive catalogue. The Rolling Stones recorded “Go Home Girl” in late 1963, but other than on bootleg, it remains unreleased.
Ry’s Bop Til You Drop version was recorded Tex-Mex style with a haunting guitar part to accompany the heartrending lyrics.
20. On A Monday (1972) Huddie Ledbetter, better known as Lead Belly, gave us some of the greatest folk blues songs of the 20th century, including “Goodnight Irene”, “Midnight Special”, “Cottonfields”, “Black Betty” and many others. “On A Monday” may be less well known, but it’s as memorable and noteworthy as almost anything else the great man wrote. The song dates from the late 1930s (when it went by the title “Yellow Women’s Door Bells”) and has appeared on many Lead Belly compilations since. It was covered by Lonnie Donegan in 1957 and re-worked as “I Got Stripes” by Johnny Cash in 1959.
Ry’s hard rocking version on Into The Purple Valley features a great vocal and yet another timeless slide solo.
19. The Girls From Texas (1980)“She was guilty, I was dead and what do you think that ol’ judge said?
Aw, that’s just the way the girls are down here in Texas. Case dismissed!”
Another bittersweet vignette of domestic strife, with hilarious lyrics delivered deadpan, as only Ry knows how. The 1967 original by soul singer Jimmy Lewis was a medium paced swing affair in waltz time, quite different to Ry’s double 4/4 time polka version on Borderline. In 1992 Flaco Jimenez recorded another worthy up-tempo version on his album Partners with Ry guesting on vocals and guitar.
18. FDR In Trinidad (1972)
Written by Fitz Maclean to commemorate President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's 1936 visit to Trinidad, this popular calypso was recorded by several local musicians. The best known version is probably by The Atilla (Raymond Quevedo*) one of the most famous calypso artists of all time, who recorded it for Decca as “Roosevelt In Trinidad”. The lyrics were no doubt sincere and heartfelt when they were written, but they can’t help sounding naive and a little sarcastic in today’s politically cynical age.
Ry’s Into the Purple Valley version features some dazzling acoustic guitar and mandolin parts with a great vocal. Van Dyke Parks also covered the song in 1972 on his album Discover America.
*Raymond Quevedo (1892 - 1962) recorded under several names with various spellings, including Atilla, The Atilla and Atilla the Hun.
17. Maria Elena (1972)
Mexican composer Lorenzo Barcelata wrote this gorgeous tune in 1932 and English lyrics were added by Bob Russell in 1940. It was dedicated to María Elena Peralta, the wife of Emilio Portes Gil, who was the Mexican President between 1928-1930.
Lawrence Welk took the tune into the US charts in 1941, the first of several big band recordings, both vocal and instrumental. Brazilian guitar duo Los Indios Tabajaras recorded an instrumental version in 1958 which became a US and UK top 10 hit in 1963, selling over a million copies.
“I learned it from a Bunk Johnson record, made when he was already old” said Ry in the sleeve notes of The UFO Has Landed compilation. That record was probably The Last Testament Of A Great New Orleans Jazzman, released in 1953 but recorded in 1947 when jazz trumpeter Bunk was aged 68. Ry’s tender version on Boomer’s Story receives the full Mexican treatment.
16. The Bourgeois Blues (1976)Another song by the great Lead Belly, recorded in 1938 following his trip to Washington, DC to work with music historian Alan Lomax. It pulls no punches, dealing with racism, the Jim Crow laws, and the conditions faced by black Americans living in the south.
Ry’s recording on Chicken Skin Music is delivered jug band style with brass instruments and an accordion, gaining momentum with every verse. It’s a fine version and even though many of the lyrics still ring true, this song would be challenging for a white performer to sing today, especially as it contains two examples of the “n” word.
15. The Dark End Of The Street (Live 1977)
Written by Dan Penn and Chips Moman in 1966, "The Dark End of the Street" was first recorded on the Goldwax label by James Carr, becoming a Billboard top 10 R&B single the following year. Ry first recorded it in 1972 on Boomer’s Story as an instrumental, but the definitive Cooder version appears on the live Show Time album. With soulful vocals by Eldridge King, Bobby King and Terry Evans plus a momentous slide solo, it became a guaranteed concert highlight.
14. Crazy ‘bout An Automobile (Every Woman I Know) (1980)
“Every woman I know, crazy 'bout an automobile
And here I am standing with nothing but rubber heels.”
Another triumphant re-working of an obscure and long-forgotten slice of Americana, this hard rocking ditty became a cornerstone of Ry’s 80s live set. Onstage the backing vocals and synchronised dance moves by Willie Greene Jr, Bobby King and Pico Payne became a major feature, growing to the point where they virtually overtook the whole song.
This pathos-filled gem was first recorded in 1957 by Billy “The Kid” Emerson (as, simply, "Every Woman I Know”) on the Vee Jay label. Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs covered it on their 1965 Woolly Bully album and there is also a little-known version by erstwhile Bill Black’s Combo guitarist Al Vance, recorded the same year.
Any of Ry’s live versions are worth seeking out, but I’m going for the 1980 studio recording on Borderline.
13. Money Honey (1972)
“I said, tell me baby, face to face,
How could another man take my place?
She said, money, honey.”
There’s a brief magical moment around 2:55 into “Money Honey” when the song appears to be breaking down, with the band all at sea. Then, just when it seems like all is lost, drummer Jim Keltner picks up the beat again and the track continues to the finish line. This was pointed out to me around 1973 by George Butler, a Ladbroke Grove local (via Scotland) and a drummer of some renown (Pink Fairies, Elvis Costello, Ian Dury, Alex Harvey etc). I hadn’t noticed it before and, I suspect, neither had you. But George was a drummer, you see, and he was acutely aware of these things. Sadly, George Butler died in 2018, but I can never listen to “Money Honey” without hearing that breakdown and thinking of him.
Written by Jesse Stone, “Money Honey” was first recorded in 1953 by the Drifters with Clyde McPhatter. The first notable cover was by Elvis on his 1956 self-titled debut LP (released in the UK as Rock n’ Roll) but countless versions followed. Jesse Stone also wrote songs under the pseudonym Charles (or Chuck) Calhoun. His best-known composition as Calhoun was probably "Shake, Rattle and Roll", as recorded by Big Joe Turner and Bill Haley and his Comets. Calhoun also wrote “Smack Dab in the Middle” which Cooder recorded on Chicken Skin Music (see #24) . Fun fact: Gloria Jones sang backing vocals on Into The Purple Valley and that's her belting out those waspish exchanges with Ry on "Money Honey".
12. How Can You Keep On Moving (Unless You Migrate Too) (1972)
A dust bowl ballad recounting the plight of the dispossessed 1930s farmers from the Great Plains of Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas who were turned away at the California border. Sounding like an up-tempo version of “Taxes On The Farmer Feeds Us All” (see #10) it moves at a fair old lick with some great guitar parts and another textbook Cooder acoustic slide solo.
Although credited as “traditional” on Into The Purple Valley, this song was written by Agnes "Sis" Cunningham, the founding editor of Broadside magazine and composer of several important protest songs. She also wrote the sleeve notes for the 1964 Elektra debut album by Phil Ochs, All The News That’s Fit To Sing.
The song was first recorded by the New Lost City Ramblers in 1959 as “Keep Moving” on their Folkways LP Songs From The Depression. Sis Cunningham’s own version appeared in 1976 (as “How Can You Keep On Movin’”) on the Folkways album Sundown - Broadside #9.
11. Tattler (1974)
Here’s something you don’t often see - a Ry Cooder songwriting credit. “Tattler” grew from a 1929 song by Washington Phillips, "You Can't Stop a Tattler - Part 2”. The original was recorded using a Dolceola, a strange musical instrument resembling a miniature piano, but which is actually a zither with a keyboard. Manufactured only from 1903 to 1907, Dolceolas created an unusual, angelic, music-box sound.
The Washington Phillips recording sat unreleased for decades until Ry stumbled across it. Together with his producer and brother-in-law Russ Titelman, they tweaked the melody, added some Cooder-esque guitar parts, and generally reinvigorated it for the Paradise and Lunch album. As a result, the “Tattler” composer credit now reads: "Washington Phillips, Ry Cooder, Russ Titelman".
In 1976 Linda Ronstadt covered the song (using Ry’s arrangement almost down to the last note) on her album Hasten Down The Wind. Rick Nelson also recorded a version, re-titled "Do The Best You Can", on his 1981 album Playing To Win.
10. Taxes On The Farmer Feeds Us All (1972)
"We worked through spring and winter, through summer and through fall
But the mortgage worked the hardest and the steadiest of us all."
This is where it all started for me (see above). If I had to pick a single track that sums up the early sound of Ry Cooder, it would be this one. Taken at a lazy, swaggering tempo slightly behind the beat with great vocals and a bottleneck solo to die for, this recording distils the very essence of Ry’s music into a little over three minutes. 48 years on, “Taxes On The Farmer Feeds Us All” still sounds as thrilling today as the first time I heard it.
Although the Into The Purple Valley album sleeve notes credit the song as “traditional”, the chances are it was written by Fiddlin’ John Carson who first recorded it (as “The Farmer Is The Man Who Feeds Them All”) for the Okeh label in 1923. It was also recorded by the New Lost City Ramblers on their 1959 Folkways LP Songs From The Depression.
9. How Can A Poor Man Stand Such Times And Live (1977)
“Well, when we get our grocery bill
We feel like making our will
Tell me, how can a poor man stand such times and live?”
Ry first covered this tale of despair for his debut album in 1970, but it’s the live version from Show Time which concerns us here. Recorded in December 1976 at The Great American Music Hall in San Francisco with Flaco Jimenez and the Chicken Skin Music band, this is surely a performance for the ages. Ry can make time stand still with his delicate slide solos and this is one of his best. Although it must be said, he played an even better solo during this song on the Old Grey Whistle Test in 1977 when the Chicken Skin Band toured Europe (find it on YouTube).
The song was written by Blind Alfred Reed, a white country musician from Floyd County, Virginia and the original version appeared on the Victor label in 1929. The New Lost City Ramblers covered it in 1959 and, more recently, Bruce Springsteen recorded the song for We Shall Overcome - The Seeger Sessions in 2006.
8. Jesus On The Mainline (Live 1977)
“Imagine the impact of the telephone in rural America. Call up Jesus, because I know you got a long list. Looking at it another way, would technology bring about a change? Would they get the message through? Seems like the line is always busy” – The UFO Has Landed CD sleeve notes.
There are many versions of this traditional gospel blues dating back to the 1930s, but it was probably Mississippi Fred McDowell’s 60s recording which prompted Ry to cover it.
In a rare recent UK performance Ry sang “Jesus on the Mainline” at the 2017 BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards from the Royal Albert Hall in London where he received a lifetime achievement award.
This song has been in Cooder's repertoire for many decades, performed with several different arrangements. The simple but effective Show Time version featuring only acoustic slide with backing vocals and handclaps works much better than the lumbering Paradise and Lunch band recording with its ornate brass arrangement.
7. Viva Sequin / Do Re Mi (Live) (1977)
The notion of fusing a Tex-Mex polka and a Woody Guthrie dust bowl ballad was a stroke of genius which Ry pulled off in style. Written and recorded around 1950 by Don Santiago Jiménez, Sr. (yes, he was the father of legendary accordionist Flaco Jiménez) “Viva Seguin”* was named in honour of Juan Seguin, a Chicano hero during the 1835-36 Texas war of independence against Mexico (or possibly in honour of the city of Seguin, Texas). It’s a standard polka which has been recorded by almost every conjuntos (small musical group) at least once.
Guthrie’s “Do Re Mi” dates from 1940 and takes the form of a warning to would-be migrants looking to move to California from Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Georgia and Tennessee, as mentioned in the lyrics. The song was later included on Woody’s album Dust Bowl Ballads.
Ry first recorded “Do Re Mi” for his 1970 debut album, but it’s the 1977 live mash-up on Show Time you really want.
*The Show Time album spells this track as “Viva Sequin”.
6. The Very Thing That Makes You Rich (Makes Me Poor) (1979)
The story goes that Nashville songwriter Chips Moman handed Ry a demo tape containing around fifty songs by an unknown Memphis cab driver named Sidney Bailey. Cooder was so impressed he asked Warner Bros to let him take Bailey into the studio to record an album. It never happened, but one of Bailey’s songs, the poignant “The Very Thing That Makes You Rich (Makes Me Poor)”, turned up on Bop till You Drop. Ry had previously recorded Bailey’s “Fool For A Cigarette” on Paradise and Lunch in 1974.
5. I Think It’s Going To Work Out Fine (1979)
Which came first, the vocal version or the instrumental? Ry’s exquisite Bop till You Drop slide interpretation of “I Think It’s Going To Work Out Fine” is clearly based on the Ike & Tina Turner song (which they titled “It’s Gonna Work Out Fine”) released as both a single and on their Dynamite! LP. However, during a 1983 interview Ry claimed he was inspired to record the song in this style after hearing an unidentified Otis Rush guitar instrumental.
But there is also an instrumental version of the Ike & Tina song (minus Tina) on the album Ike & Tina Turner’s Kings Of Rhythm Dance. The two Ike & Tina recordings were released almost simultaneously in 1962 on individual Sue label albums with consecutive catalogue numbers (LP 2003 and LP 2004). Confused?
4. Vigilante Man (1972)
Probably the first time most people in Britain set eyes on Ry was on March 19, 1973 when he played "Vigilante Man" and "Goin' To Brownsville" live on the Old Grey Whistle Test. Sitting alone on a cheap canvas chair, resplendent in his Hawaiian shirt, houndstooth check pants and bandana with a top of the line Martin D45 guitar, he cut a striking figure. It remains one of the most memorable OGWT performances by any artist and is still spoken of in hushed reverence today (and not only by Cooder fans).
The tune came via Blind Lemon Jefferson’s “See That My Grave Is Kept Clean” (1928) and the Carter Family’s “Sad And Lonesome Day” (1937) but the lyrics are all Woody Guthrie’s, written in 1940 during his New York period and inspired by the film of John Steinbeck’s The Grapes Of Wrath.
Ry originally performed “Vigilante Man” as a solo bottleneck showcase, but in recent years it has grown to become a 10 minute live ensemble tour de force. Find it on Into The Purple Valley (1972) and / or Live In San Francisco (2013).
3. Lipstick Sunset (1987 John Hiatt)
From the truly magical 1987 John Hiatt album Bring the Family, “Lipstick Sunset” features arguably Ry’s most perfectly-formed studio slide guitar solo. The album brought together, for the first time, Hiatt, Cooder, Nick Lowe on bass and Jim Keltner on drums. The four would reunite in 1992 to form the short-lived supergroup Little Village (see #40).
“Lipstick Sunset” became a cornerstone of the Little Village live set, and onstage Ry took the song to undreamed-of heights with some quite remarkable extended slide solos.
2. Tamp ‘em Up Solid (1974)
It’s thought Ry first heard this this railroad song, or tie-tamping chant (tie = railroad sleeper), by Josh White on his 1963 album The Beginning, Volume 2 (where it was titled "TAP 'Em Up Solid"), but it dates back much further than that. The song was probably first documented by archivist and folklorist John A. Lomax and several recordings appear in the Library of Congress, including Rochelle Harris (1933), Sam (Old Dad) Ballard (1934), the Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet (1940) and Manuel (Peter Hatcher) Jones (1940).
Ry’s Paradise and Lunch recording features some lovely acoustic work, while the shuffle beat, double stop guitar figures and backing vocals perfectly evoke the sound of a freight train.
1. Across The Borderline (1987)
Anyone who saw the 2003 Bill Murray movie Lost In Translation will be familiar with the concept of Western celebrities filming advertisements purely for the Japanese market. It’s a curiously self-contained phenomenon which, until the advent of the internet, many in the West were unaware of. Appearing in these ads carries none of the stigma often associated with such endorsements in Europe and the US. In fact, in Japan they are viewed as a sign of prestige.
While Ry Cooder may not be a big movie star, or even a world-famous rock musician, he was well-known enough in Japan to be involved in a couple* of these endeavours.
In 1981 he made a commercial for a Pioneer car stereo with the unlikely name of “The Lonesome Car-Boy”. The advert used the song “Across The Borderline” as its soundtrack and this recording was also released as a Japan-only 7” promo single in 1981.
A year later Freddy Fender tackled “Across The Borderline” for the soundtrack of the movie The Border, backed by Sam “The Sham” Samudio and Ry’s band. Freddy’s recording was later included on the double CD Music By Ry Cooder, a 1995 compilation of Ry’s film themes.
Since then the song has been covered many times, with versions by Willie Nelson, Willie De Ville and even, albeit unofficially, Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen, among others.
Ry returned to this enchanting song in 1987 for Get Rhythm with joint vocals from actor Harry Dean Stanton and a breathtaking slide guitar solo.
It’s a tough call as all three Cooder versions are excellent, but I’m choosing the Get Rhythm recording as the pick of the bunch, if only because at 6:15 it’s the longest and most atmospheric of them all. Jointly written by Ry, John Hiatt and Jim Dickinson, “Across The Borderline” is surely one of the finest and most enduring songs our man has ever put his name to and fully deserves to sit at #1 in this list.
*Ry also made a 1988 Japanese TV ad for Early Times Kentucky whiskey, where he was seen cheekily playing a few seconds of the theme from Southern Comfort (find it on YouTube).